Act V: Nate, Natalie, Atticus, and Veronica.
Imagery: “Cleanse the stuffed bosom of that perilous stuff” (V. 3. 44)
Assonance: “And ber’t before him; thereby shall we shadow the numbers of our host, and make discovery err in report of us.” (V.4. 5-7)
Pathos: “the time approves that will with due division make us know what we shall say we have and what we owe. Thoughts speculative their unsure hopes await come up but certain issue strokes must arbitrate; toward which advance the war. (V.4. 17.20)
Apostrophe: “Out damned spot! Out I say! “(V. 1.30)
Aphorism: “Unnatural breeds do breed unnatural troubles” (V.1.61-62)
Motif: “I would not wish them to a fairer death” (V.8.49)
Motif: “Foul whispering are abroad!” (V.1.61)
Allusion:”Why should I play the Roman fool and die on mine own sword?” (V.8.1-2)
Metaphor: “Life’s but a walking shadow…” (V.5.24)
Rhetorical question:” Why should I play the Roman fool and die on mine own sword? Whiles I see lives, the gashes do better upon them” (V.8.1-3)
Personification: “Unnatural breeds do breed unnatural troubles” (V.1.61-62)
Metonymy: “The English power is near.” (V.2.1)
Euphemism: “…untimely ripped.” (V.8.16)
Polysyndeton: “Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow.” (V.5.19)
Antithesis: “The devil damned thee black, thou cream-faced loon.” (V.3.11)
Colloquialism: “If thou speak’st false.” (V.5.38)
Vernacular: “If thou speak’st false.” (V.5.38)
Elegy: “Your son, my lord, has paid a soldiers’ debt; he only lived but till he was a man; the which the sooner had his prowes confirmed in thee unshrinking station that he fought, but like a man he died.”(V.8.39-43)
Dialect: “If thou speak’st false.” (V.5.38) REPEATED...
Litotes: “Being of no woman born.”(V.8.31)
Rhetorical question: “A soldier come and afeard? What need we fear who knows it, when none can call our power to account? Yet who would have thought the old man to have so much blood in him? (V.1.31-34)

Aphostrophe: " to bed, to bed!" (V.1.56)